Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Indian tribes to co-manage Bears Ears

Deal with U.S. government marks historic first for national monuments

- MAXINE JOSELOW

The Biden administra­tion has reached a historic agreement to give five American Indian tribes more say over the day-to-day management of a national monument in Utah, marking a new chapter in the federal government’s often-fraught relationsh­ip with tribes.

The Interior Department’s Bureau of Land Management and the U.S. Forest Service signed the cooperativ­e agreement on Saturday with five tribes that have inhabited the region surroundin­g Bears Ears National Monument for centuries: the Hopi Tribe, the Navajo Nation, the Ute Mountain Ute Tribe, the Ute Indian Tribe of the Uintah and Ouray Reservatio­n, and the Pueblo of Zuni.

“Today, instead of being removed from a landscape to make way for a public park, we are being invited back to our ancestral homelands to help repair them and plan for a resilient future,” Carleton Bowekaty, co-chair of the Bears Ears Commission and lieutenant governor of the Pueblo of Zuni, said in a statement.

Bureau of Land Management Director Tracy Stone-Manning said in a statement the agreement is “an important step as we move forward together to ensure that tribal expertise and traditiona­l perspectiv­es remain at the forefront of our joint decision-making for the Bears Ears National Monument.”

The move comes as Interior Secretary Deb Haaland — the first American Indian to serve as a Cabinet member — works to repair the federal government’s relationsh­ip with tribes, which has been tarnished by instances of federal officials removing Indigenous peoples from their ancestral lands.

Humans have inhabited the southeast corner of Utah for 13,000 years, carving arrowheads from stone, farming corn, painting images on rocks and creating communitie­s on the mesa tops. But in recent years, Bears Ears has been at the center of a political battle over public lands.

In 2016, President Barack Obama establishe­d the Bears Ears National Monument, named for a pair of tall buttes that resemble the top of a bear’s head peeking over a ridge. His proclamati­on recognized the land’s “profoundly sacred” meaning for many American Indian tribes.

Eleven months later, in December 2017, President Donald Trump shrank Bears Ears by more than 1.1 million acres, or about 85%. While conservati­ve lawmakers cheered the decision, activists protested outside the White House and in Utah.

In October 2021, President Joe Biden used executive orders to protect 1.36 million acres in Bears Ears — slightly larger than the original boundary that Obama establishe­d.

The orders also reversed Trump’s cuts to the 1.87 million-acre Grand Staircase-Escalante monument. They reestablis­hed the Bears Ears Commission, which comprises one elected officer from each of the five tribes.

Federal officials, including at the Interior Department, have often had fraught dealings with the nation’s 574 federally recognized tribes across the Lower 48 and Alaska. In the late 19th century, federal officials removed Native Americans from their ancestral lands, including from Yellowston­e, the nation’s first national park.

In 1983, then-Interior Secretary James Watt blamed the problems on U.S. reservatio­ns on Indigenous culture.

“If you want an example of the failure of socialism, don’t go to Russia,” Watts said. “Come to America and go to the Indian reservatio­ns.”

Haaland, a member of the Pueblo of Laguna, has sought to address this troubled legacy since taking the helm of the Interior Department last year.

In May, she announced plans to meet with survivors of Indian boarding schools across the country in a tour called “The Road to Healing.” American Indian children who attended these schools were forcibly taken from their families to be “assimilate­d,” and those who died were often buried in unmarked graves.

 ?? (The New York Times file photo) ?? The sun rises over the Valley of the Gods, a part of the Bears Ears National Monument, near Blanding, Utah, on Aug. 23, 2017.
(The New York Times file photo) The sun rises over the Valley of the Gods, a part of the Bears Ears National Monument, near Blanding, Utah, on Aug. 23, 2017.

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